Ryan on Saturday touted via Twitter a Pennsylvania woman's comment to the Associated Press that the extra buck-and-a-half would pay for her annual Costco membership.

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But after being mocked for bragging about that impact, the tweet from the Wisconsin Republican was deleted.

The imbroglio came days after his Democratic counterpart, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, was criticized for likening companies' $1,000 employee bonuses to "crumbs."

The $1.5 trillion tax cut, signed by President Trump in December, includes a permanent 40% tax cut for corporations, a change Republicans say is long overdue and desperately needed to make America more competitive in the global economy.

The bill also lowers tax rates for individuals and families temporarily, while increasing the standard deduction and the child tax credit. But because the bill also kills or limits key tax deductions — most notably reducing the amount of state and local taxes that individuals can deduct on their federal tax returns — the impact on individuals will vary.

Ryan's exuberance about the $1.50 weekly raise set Twitter afire on a Saturday afternoon.

I think Paul Ryan might not know how costco works. Like you still have to pay for the groceries too, not just the membership. https://t.co/AUW8wGqj40

$1.50 is EXACTLY how much Costco charges for its hot dog and soda combo in the food court. So now I definitely wouldn’t be shocked if Paul Ryan used that Koch donation to buy a Costco. pic.twitter.com/NKSSHj7VfC

Paul Ryan doesn't want you to see this deleted tweet where he said that the GOP's trillion dollar plus giveaway to the rich is justified because a secretary got a buck fifty a week out of the deal. pic.twitter.com/7gtoyCB0wh

It’s not just that folks on the bottom didn’t get their fair share, it’s that many barely got anything. They spent/borrowed 1.5 trillion dollars and regular people get free twinkies or a couple of bucks. This is just a huge wealth transfer up, and people know it.